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Jafar Arkani-Hamed Department of Physics, University of Toronto

Magnetic Field of Mars. A public lecture presenting the findings of the recent Mars missions and their implications for Martian surface properties, internal structure, and evolution. by Professor Jafar Arkani-Hamed Earth & Planetary Sciences, McGill University Montréal, Québec, Canada.

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Jafar Arkani-Hamed Department of Physics, University of Toronto

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  1. Magnetic Field of Mars A public lecture presenting the findings of the recent Mars missions and their implications for Martian surface properties, internal structure, and evolution. by Professor Jafar Arkani-Hamed Earth & Planetary Sciences, McGill University Montréal, Québec, Canada Jafar Arkani-Hamed Department of Physics, University of Toronto

  2. We have lived here for 40 000 centuries We will live here within the next two centuries

  3. Missions to Mars: 1960 - 2004 X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X Images from: http://nssdc.gsfc.nasa.gov and http://photojournal.jpl.nasa.gov

  4. Mars Global Surveyor Dry mass: 1030.5 kg Entered orbit: 12 Sept, 1997 Science Objectives: • Studies of the topography and gravity • The role of water on the surface and in the atmosphere • High resolution imaging of the surface • The weather and climate of Mars • The composition of the surface and atmosphere • Existence and evolution of the Martian magnetic field

  5. Low altitude orbits (100-200 km) High altitude orbits (360-480 km) • No data at the poles • Large gaps

  6. Radial Component of Magnetic Field • Major anomalies are in the south • No altitude corrections are made From Acuna et al, Science, v284, 790-793, 1999

  7. Presentation outline • Magnetic Anomalies of Mars • Derivation and charateristics • Global interpretations • Source of the Magnetic Anomalies • Strong core field • Thick magnetic crust • High concentration of magnetic minerals • Magnetic minerals with strong NRM

  8. Contributers A public lecture presenting the findings of the recent Mars missions and their implications for Martian surface properties, internal structure, and evolution. by Professor Jafar Arkani-Hamed Earth & Planetary Sciences, McGill University Montréal, Québec, Canada • Daniel Boutin • Alex Lemerle • Pundit Mohit • Hosein Shahnas • Many other investigators (no explicit reference)

  9. High-Altitude Magnetic Data Analysis • Data acquired 1999-2003 • All three components of the magnetic field • Divide the data into two almost equal parts • Analysis each part separately • Covariance analysis of the two sets of data • Derive a magnetic anomaly map based on the most repeatable features of the two sets

  10. Power Spectra ofRecent Spherical Harmonic ModelsRn= (n+1) m=-nn Vnm2

  11. Low Resolution

  12. Magnetic Anomalies of Eastern Canada

  13. Low Resolution

  14. Timing of the Core Dynamo Crustal field and tectonics • Lowlands • Impact basins • Shield volcanoes • Valles Marineris Martian meteorites • Young ~ 1.3 – 0.6 Gyr. • Old (ALH0084) ~ 4 Gyr. No strong core dynamo has existed for the last 4 Gyr

  15. Strong Magnetization of Martian Crust • Requires a vertically integrated Remanent magnetization of (6-10) x 105 A, more than 10 times that of the Earth • Has been resulted from some combination of 1. a strong magnetizing core field, 2. a thick magnetic layer, 3. a high concentration of magnetic minerals, 4. magnetic minerals with strong remanent magnetization.

  16. 1. Strength of the Core Field Two methods to estimate the core field intensity • The energy balance method (the gravitational energy released by the cooling of the core is balanced by the Ohmic energy dissipated). Depends on highly unconstrained thermal evolution estimates. • The magnetostrophic balance method (the Coriolis force is balanced by the Lorentz force). B = (2 Ω ρ μo U L)1/2 Ω = rotation rate, ρ = density, μo = magnetic permeability, U = the characteristic velocity in the core, and L = the characteristic dimension of the core.

  17. Mars / Earth B / B’ = [Ω ρ U L / (Ω’ ρ’ U’ L’]1/2 ~ 0.5 The field decreases from the core, Rc, to the surface, Rs βn= Bs / Bc = (Rc/Rs) (n+2) β1/ β’1 ~ 0.5 for dipole field The dipole core field at the surface of Mars that magnetized the crust was weaker than the present core field at the surface of the Earth.

  18. 2. Thickness of the Magnetic Crust • Thermal state of the Martian crust when the core dynamo was active • Magnetic blocking temperatures of the major magnetic carriers of the crust • Magnetite (Tc = 580 C) • Hematite (Tc = 670 C) • Pyrrhotite (Tc = 230 C)

  19. Convection Regime in the Mantle • Early plate tectonics • Thinner magnetic layer • Stagnant-lid convection • Thicker magnetic layer We seek an upper limit for the thickness of the magnetic crust

  20. Thermal Evolution Models • A total of 23 thermal Evolution Models are calculated • The parameters examined: • Thickness of initial crust • Total heat generation and its concentration in the crust • Initial temperature of the mantle • Viscosity of the mantel • Thermal expansion coefficient of the mantle • Super heated core • Heat generation in the core

  21. Temperature in the Martian Lithosphere

  22. Time Variations of Magnetic Layer Thickness, and the Stagnant Lid

  23. Depth to Curie Temperatures of Hematite, Magnetite and Pyrrhotite(at 4 Gyr ago, and the minimum achieved)

  24. 3. Concentration of Magnetic Minerals • Martian crust is more iron rich than Earth’s • No information is available about the state of oxidation of iron in the Martian crust An Open Question !!

  25. 4. Magnetic Minerals with Strong Remanent Magnetization(Magnetite, Hematite, Pyrrhotite)

  26. SD/PSD Magnetite Particles • SD/PSD magnetite particles can be produced during the initial rapid cooling of lava • Oxyexsolusion of titanomagnetite to intergrown magnetically single-domain magnetite [Dunlop and Ozdemir [1997]. • Oxidation of olivine basalt and exsolution of magnetite in a single domain state, that might have acquired strong magnetization in the presence of the core field [Gunnlaugsson et al., [2006]

  27. Mars a One-Plate Planet • Mantle differentiation and core formation within 20-30 My. (Halliday et al., 2001) • Martian crust has likely formed gradually in the first 500 My. (Norman, 2002). • The entire Martian crust has probably a basaltic composition (McSween et al., 2003) • Crustal thickening is largely by volcanism in a one-plate planet (Tharsis bulge with an about 20 km thick basaltic layer is possibly the last major crust forming volcanism)

  28. Cooling of a Lava Flow • We consider an initially hot lithosphere of 100 km thickness, with or without an initial crust. • The lithosphere cools for a while before a layer of lava is added on it. • The lava cools for a period before being covered by the next lava flow. • The 1-D heat conduction equation is solved C ρ ∂ T / ∂ t = ∂ / ∂ z (K ∂ T/ ∂ z) + Q • C (1200 J/kg /K) and ρ (3000 kg/m3) are constant • K is temperature dependent (Shatz and Simmons, 1972) • Q is space and time dependent, at present U = 16 ppb; Th/U =3.5; K/U =19,062 (Wanke and Drebius, 1994)

  29. Cooling of a Lava Flow • The temperature is zero at the surface and fixed at the base of the lithosphere • The initial temperature of the lithosphere is the solidus of dry peridotite (1600 C) • For the lithosphere with an initial crust, the initial temperature increases linearly in the crust. • The lava is assumed completely molten and at the liquidus of dry basalt (1250 C) • The thickness of the lava layers (d) is constant and the time interval Δt for lava flows is determined by Δt = {[exp(- to / τ) - exp(- tf / τ )] . τ . d . exp(- t / τ )} / (δf - δo) where δo and δf denote the initial and final thicknesses of the crust, to and tf are the starting and ending times of volcanism, and τ is the characteristic time of the exponential growth of the crust.

  30. Temperature Profiles in a Lava Layer(The numbers on the curves are times in years)

  31. Thermal Evolution of a 30 m thick Lava Flow

  32. Temperature at the Middle of a Lava Flow (10, 30, and 50 m thick lava)

  33. Growth of Volcanic Crust(The numbers on the curves denote models)

  34. Temperature at the Center of the First Lava Layer Versus Depth of the Layer (The numbers on the curves denote models)

  35. Changes in the Magnetization of the Crust Factors that have affected the crustal Magnetization • Hydrothermal magnetization / demagnetization • Impact demagnetization • Secondary magnetization • Viscous decay of magnetization

  36. Impact-Induced Shock Pressure(a basin with 200 km radius)

  37. Intensity of the Magnetic Field at 100 km Altitude(Inner Circle = Pi scaling; outer circle = Holsapple-Schmidt scaling)

  38. Intermediate Size CratersCain JAH Mitchell

  39. Secondary Magnetization • Upper crust is magnetized by the core field • Lower crust is magnetized by the magnetic field of the upper crust, in the absence of the core dynamo • Lower crust is divided into 5 equal thickness layers. • Magnetization of each layer is assumed depth-independent

  40. Magnetization Acquired by the Lower Crust

  41. Viscous Decay of Magnetization Magnetite Particles

  42. Viscous Decay of the Magnetization of the Crustin the Last 4 Gyr

  43. Conclusions - 1 • The core dynamo ceased some times before ~4 Gyr ago • The core field of Mars that magnetized the Martian crust was likely weaker than the present core field of the Earth. • The potentially magnetic crust of Mars ranges in thickness from 30 to 80 km, depending on the major magnetic carriers. • Low-temperature hydration, secondary magnetization, and viscous decay have minor effects on the bulk crustal magnetization. • Impact demagnetization is important only within the large impact basins

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